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Standard User Iniltous
(committed) Sat 14-Jun-25 23:26:09
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Taras:
In reply to a post by Iniltous:
There isn’t really a difference between a splitter on a GPON system and a splitter on an XGSPON system, in fact GPON/XGSPON can coexist on the same fibre/splitter network…but XGSPON has the option to go upto a 256 to 1 split , and has an operating range ( distance ) of around 100km, compared to GPON max split of 128 (typically 32/1 is used ) and around 60km…speeds.


For Openreach there isn't a xgs or 25g pon or gpon splitter. As you correctly said, XGSpon can do 256 way compared to 128 for gpon. You can of course add a splitter further back up the path, so that you can split it into 2 or 4 (64 or 128) but of course you reduce the length that light will travel.

That aside, I dobut many would 64 or 128 user splits on gpon. City fibre is going from gpon to xgs pon, so i suspect the contention will stay the same


A 1/32 splitter is basically 5 x 1 to 2 optical splits contained within in a single device, built as 1 input to 2 outputs , 2 to 4 outputs , 4 to 8 , 8 to 16 , 16 inputs to 32 outputs , each internal split is a 3bB loss so 15dB overall loss for the device, to get to more than 32 outputs obviously needs more splits , a 1/4 split then 4 x 1/32 splitters hanging on each of those 4 output fibres gives potentially 128 customers , this is possible on GPON , but Openreach don’t do it .

When it comes to XGPON and XGSPON , a 1 to 8 split with 8 x1/32 splits gives 256 users , Alt Nets may do this on their XGPON and XGSPON systems because it is one of the major design benefits of these systems, if it can be done , it would be daft not to use at least some of this benefit when designing a network, but I’ve no knowledge what split ratio any particular Alt Nets uses, perhaps not 256 per PON , but 64 or 128 seems likely.

Edited by Iniltous (Sat 14-Jun-25 23:37:53)

Standard User Chrysalis
(legend) Sat 14-Jun-25 23:38:37
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
My thoughts, and I am unclear which part you specifically unhappy with.

All consumer broadband products and almost all business broadband products use shared infrastructure. This is not unusual.
Over selling I suppose can also be interpreted in different ways, so e.g. if you sell a contended product but in practice there is no congestion, I dont consider that overselling personally, I only consider it overselling if you cant hit the "up to" speeds due to visible congestion.
CityFibre allow both IPoE and PPPoE, the PPPoE will be Vodafone's choice.
1492 MTU limit will barely register on potential throughput, % wise it is 0.6%.
Vodafone speeds are up to, and I think even on a gigabit ONT, 910 throughput is possible.

In terms of visible congestion, definitely possible on GPON, but seems rare in this country, mainly due to low take up levels, immature rollout. CityFibre especially have poor take up figures, and remember most customers wont be on the faster tier products.

Vodafone have some problems on their network, they getting a lot of CityFibre sign ups, but are showing up localised issues to themselves.

I dont see how this would be an issue with sales of good act, everything you have described is not a problem in the service you have purchased.

Standard User XGS_Is_On
(experienced) Sun 15-Jun-25 17:26:37
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Taras:
That aside, I dobut many would 64 or 128 user splits on gpon. City fibre is going from gpon to xgs pon, so i suspect the contention will stay the same


Just GYI CityFibre increased the split ratio from 1:32 to 1:64 on XGSPON.


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Standard User XGS_Is_On
(experienced) Sun 15-Jun-25 17:36:11
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by ultraproblems:
Your upstream data is controlled by the BWMap and TDM (Time Domain Multiplex) the time window is 125 microseconds how many of these you get in a second must be down to the number of customers.


It's mostly down to demand. Network operators can configure to an extent how much of the capacity is provided on demand and how much is unsolicited slots. Unsolicited slots mean lower latency at the expense of capacity so it's a mix of both with demand by a long way the biggest factor.
Standard User XGS_Is_On
(experienced) Sun 15-Jun-25 18:00:05
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by ultraproblems:
Other things to keep in mind is upstream, only has a 125 micro second window to do all its transmission


No. That's the minimum length of a burst not the maximum and ONTs do not have to be provided them one at a time.

You aren't sharing with 64 others, their GPON is a 1:32 split. 8 bytes per 1500 isn't going to take 5% off, maths.

Stop reading technical specifications, it's not wise to quote stuff you don't understand and often makes it harder to get things fixed as you end up confusing the issue. Speak with your provider, see if there's a fault, if not you potentially have a torrent fiend or someone fixated with backups nearby using capacity. Vodafone should get you to the minimum they sold you.
Standard User ultraproblems
(newbie) Sun 15-Jun-25 22:17:21
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: XGS_Is_On] [link to this post]
 
I don’t get the minimum, if I use the thinkbroadband’ s measurement I get upstream around 330 Mbps and 630 Mbps downstream , sometimes this is has low as 200Mbps. This infers the PON to the ONT is a GPON, hence the difference between upstream and downstream.

Has for Tech Manuals I’ve been reading them for the last 50 years or so, along with RFCs, it was part and parcel of of the job has the network tech evolved from thick wire and taps and the AUI cables to GIGBit fibre Ethernet.

The only way to make a judgment is to be informed,
Standard User Pheasant
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Mon 16-Jun-25 07:19:12
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
It may not even be the PON congestion but more than likely Vodafone themselves. We’ve seen this before and it’s super rare for the PON to be congested.

Have you asked any of your near neighbours on the CF network if they are experiencing similar?
Standard User jpm
(fountain of knowledge) Mon 16-Jun-25 08:26:50
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by ultraproblems:
This infers the PON to the ONT is a GPON
Does it?
Standard User XGS_Is_On
(experienced) Mon 16-Jun-25 15:18:16
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by ultraproblems:
I don’t get the minimum, if I use the thinkbroadband’ s measurement I get upstream around 330 Mbps and 630 Mbps downstream , sometimes this is has low as 200Mbps. This infers the PON to the ONT is a GPON, hence the difference between upstream and downstream.

Has for Tech Manuals I’ve been reading them for the last 50 years or so, along with RFCs, it was part and parcel of of the job has the network tech evolved from thick wire and taps and the AUI cables to GIGBit fibre Ethernet.

The only way to make a judgment is to be informed,


Quote just to ensure flow easier to follow.

That your ONT is a GPON ONT tells you that you've GPON. This in no way accounts for the difference between upstream and downstream performance else it'd be that way for everyone and is not.

Do you have a Broadband Quality Monitor set up? How's that looking? Please share a snapshot as congestion should be quite evident.

Tried other speed testers? Getting the speedtest.net app to eliminate browser weirdness a good call.

https://speed.cloudflare.com/ the packet loss, bufferbloat, jitter and overall speeds would be super userful. All 3 latency and jitter numbers alongside the packet loss. Ta.
Standard User Ad_G
(regular) Mon 16-Jun-25 20:44:32
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Re: ISP Overselling Speed on PON


[re: ultraproblems] [link to this post]
 
As others have said CityFibre GPON is a 1:32 split, the specs may go to 1:64 but they don’t go beyond 1:32. It will be very unlikely there are actually 32 on a given PON due to the way the physical network is.

And CityFibre don’t use PPPoE, they provide a semi transparent layer 2 Ethernet link to your ISP. Your ISP can pick to use PPPoE or IPoE. There are at least two major ISPs using CityFibre (and Openreach FTTP) who use IPoE with DHCP so no extra overhead with those ISPs. It is Vodafone that have chosen to use PPPoE.

The speeds ISPs including Vodafone advertise are covered by very strict rules from Ofcom. The 910/910 is the agreed number and the ISPs have to provide evidence of the speeds to meet the speed code of conduct.

If you are not getting 910/910 then their is either a problem with your own network or their is an issue that needs raising with Vodafone. Vodafone should have told you what their guaranteed speed is for your service. I’ve seen lots of results of people getting the above speeds.
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